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Senate buzzsaw awaits 2020 progressive proposals

The Senate is emerging as a significant roadblock for progressive policies being championed by 2020 presidential candidates, even if Democrats win the White House next year.

As Democrats propose massive political and policy overhauls, the GOP-controlled Senate is quickly becoming a legislative buzzsaw to block progressives’ top priorities like the Green New Deal, “Medicare for All” and expanding the Supreme Court.

Even if they manage to capture the White House, the potential headaches awaiting progressives in the Senate are two-fold: If Democrats are able to win back the majority, they’ll face the herculean task of getting 60 votes for priority legislation or will need to nix the filibuster. If Republicans keep control of the chamber, they are pledging to block progressive ideas, many of which they characterize as “socialism.”

“If we do not have the Senate two very bad things will happen: One, Mitch McConnell will block everything that the new Democratic president tries to do, just as he did once he got the majority under President Obama, nothing happened,” he told New York radio station WAMC during a recent interview.

He added that Republicans could “block any presidential appointment to the Supreme Court, my guess is for one year, two years,” making it “vital” to win back control of the upper chamber.

Republicans relish the idea of being a defense against progressive policies, characterizing themselves as a “firewall” against House Democrats.

The dynamic would immediately quash major progressive proposals being touted by Democrats’ wide-ranging 2020 field from having a chance of getting signed into law, even if Democrats control both the House and White House starting in 2021.

“The Senate under Mitch McConnell’s watch is the place where progressive ideas go to die,” Levin said.

Manley added that the onus would likely shift to Democrats to search out compromise, which could be scarce given the current lack of major bipartisan proposals moving between the Democratic House and Republican Senate.

“I would expect very little, if any, cooperation out of Sen. McConnell if Republicans were to keep the Senate. I think the real question is going to be how much or whether House Democrats are going to be willing to compromise … to get things out of the Senate,” he said.

Democrats have pick-up opportunities in the 2020 election — Republicans will be defending 22 seats compared to a dozen for Democrats — but could face a difficult path to winning back control of the chamber.

If the eventual Democratic nominee defeats Trump, the party would still need to flip three GOP seats and hold onto Democratic Sen. Doug Jones’s seat in Alabama, which is expected to be a fierce fight, in order to have a 50-50 split. If they lose Alabama, they would need to flip four seats to get a 50-50 split or five seats to gain outright control.

Levin predicted that McConnell would try to use the Senate’s rules to be a “Grim Reaper” even if Republicans lose their majority, pointing to his pledge to make Obama a one-term president.

“The real question is: Will Democrats allow him to do that?” he asked.

Though Democrats would be able to confirm nominees without help from Republicans, they would likely need several GOP votes to defeat a 60-vote filibuster and ultimately pass legislation. That would leave major progressive proposals in limbo unless Democrats could fit them in under the tight scope of reconciliation, budget rules that allow senators to avoid a filibuster on certain measures.

“The question then becomes whether McConnell is willing to cut any deals to get the 60 votes necessary to get anything out of the Senate, assuming the filibuster survives,” Manley said.

Democrats are in the middle of an intraparty debate over whether to keep the 60-vote legislative filibuster if they take back the chamber next year. Progressives argue the higher threshold effectively kills any chance of passing significant legislation because it would require GOP support.

Schumer, speaking to reporters shortly before the current recess, sidestepped questions about whether he supported getting rid of the filibuster, saying instead the focus should be on taking back the majority.

“We’ll have a nice caucus of more than 50 Democrats, and we will decide what to do,” he said.

Manley, who has not taken a position on the filibuster issue, predicted that Senate Democrats are “going to have a real come-to-Jesus moment about what to do” on the filibuster if they win the majority.

Dozens of Democrats signed a letter in 2017 to keep the legislative filibuster. But they would face intense pressure from activists, and potentially their own colleagues, to use the “nuclear option” to change the rules if they hold a slim majority after 2020.

Levin, whose group is advocating for nixing the filibuster, questioned if Democrats would “actually use the power available to them.”

“Prepare to eliminate the filibuster,” he said. “Or prepare to do nothing and then lose in 2022.”